On Wed, 20 Nov 2002, Glyn Kennington wrote: > Charlie Reiman wrote: > > If you just want to see all files and their sizes, try 'find . -ls'. Sorting > > this is left as an exercise for the reader. > > ls -l puts the size in the 5th columns, so piping the output through > sort -n -k 5 > will put them in ascending order. > > Which brings me on to another little gripe: > Does anyone else find that files >100MB (requiring more than 8 digits in the > size column) break the alignment of ls -l's output? Example: > > drwxrwx--x 2 glyn glyn 4096 Nov 17 22:10 bin > drwxrwx--x 9 glyn glyn 8192 Nov 20 11:37 src > -r--r--r-- 1 glyn glyn 110215168 Nov 20 00:21 sessions_1-4.iso > ^^ Thanx for the ls hint ... I did it with:
ls -ahRS > /tmp/ls.txt It was a huge file ... thought there would be a nicer way to find my disk-space. But thanx Oliver -- ... don't touch the bang bang fruit -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]